12 — Different players who caught passes in UCLA’s shutout win over Oregon State and North Carolina’s 35-point win over Duke.

25 — With Frank Beamer retiring at Virginia Tech, and provided he doesn’t do the same, Kansas State’s Bill Snyder will be the longest-tenured FBS head coach at the same school at a quarter of a century next season. Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz and Oklahoma’s Bob Stoops would be next at 18 years, followed by TCU’s Gary Patterson at 16.

29 — Consecutive Big Ten regular season wins for Ohio State, tying Florida State (ACC, 1992-95) for the fourth-longest conference winning streak of all-time. Oklahoma won 44 straight Big 7/8 games from 1952-59, while OU (Big 8, 1984-88) and Boise State (WAC, 2001-05) are tied for the second-longest streak at 31 straight.

32.5 — Yards per catch Oklahoma State’s James Washington has averaged the past three games (15 catches, 487 yards).

77 — Consecutive games for Oregon in which they’ve thrown a touchdown pass, extending their own FBS record. Texas Tech (2006-11) had held the previous record at 69 straight before it was broken by the Ducks earlier this year.

207 — Rushing yards for New Mexico State’s Larry Rose III in a win over Texas State, giving him back-to-back 200-yard games and three on the season.

212.7 — Pass efficiency rating for Bowling Green’s Matt Johnson over the last four games (111-144, 1,602 yards, 19 touchdowns, one interception). Baylor’s Seth Russell currently leads the country at 189.7; Johnson is third at 179.1.

216 — Receiving yards for Corey Coleman, the second time in the Baylor receiver’s career is topped 200 yards. The nation’s leading receiver in yardage, Coleman has topped 100 yards in seven of eight games this season. He’s also caught two or more touchdowns in seven straight games.

268 — Yards rushing and passing Temple accumulated in rolling up 536 yards of offense in a 60-40 win over SMU Friday night.

404 — Yards passing for North Carolina’s Marquis Williams against Duke in the first half. Williams would finish with a school-record 494 yards, and set another program standard with 524 yards of total offense.

419 — Yards passing for Jarrett Stidham in his first career start in Baylor’s win over Kansas State Thursday night.

442 — Career-high passing yards for Brandon Allen in Arkansas’ overtime win over Ole Miss. Is was the second 400-yard game of Allen’s career, both of which have come this season.

497 — Yards passing for Washington State’s Luke Falk in the win over Arizona State. It’s Falk’s eighth straight game with 300 or more yards, and fifth time this season he’s gone over 400 yards.

711 — Yards of total offense for Western Michigan in Thursday’s 54-7 win over Ball State, breaking the school single-game record. The total is the most by a MAC team this season and the seventh-most in conference history.

777 — Yards of total offense (300 passing, 477 rushing) for Oregon in the win over Cal.

1937 — Last year North Carolina State had beaten Boston College in Chestnut Hill prior to Saturday’s 24-8 road win. NCSU had previously lost six in a row at BC.

3,097 — Career receiving yards for Pittsburgh’s Tyler Boyd, breaking the record of 3,061 yards previously held by Antonio Bryant.

9,200 — Number of songs downloaded onto TCU head coach Gary Patterson‘s iPod, at least according to that school’s sports information department.

35,050 — Amount, in dollars, of the highest current bid in an auction for a Leonard Fournette game-used jersey and a pair of game-used helmets signed by Les Miles and Steve Spurrier. The opening bid, incidentally, was $7,000. All of the money raised in the auction will go toward the South Carolina flood relief effort.

One final statistical note, in list form, courtesy of the Ohio State sports information department:

After nearly a month away, it appears Josh Ferguson is set to make a return for Illinois. Probably.

On the official injury report released ahead of Saturday’s game against Purdue, Ferguson is listed as probable to play this weekend. Ferguson sustained an injury to his right shoulder in the first quarter of the Week 6 game against Nebraska and hasn’t played since, missing the last three games because of the issue.

Coincidentally or not, the Illini are 4-1 with Ferguson on the field this season, 0-3 without him.

Prior to the injury and through the first five games, Ferguson’s 381 rushing yards, three rushing touchdowns and 5.4 yards per carry were all tops on the team. He’s added 12 receptions for 28 yards and another touchdown coming out of the backfield.

Ferguson’s backup, Ke’Shawn Vaughn, now stands as the Illini’s leading rusher with 485 yards. He also has four touchdowns on the ground.

If Illinois is going to improve upon its solid 4-1 start to the 2015 season, it’ll have to do so without a significant cog in its offensive machinery.

On the official injury report release Thursday night, the Illini confirmed that Josh Ferguson has been ruled out of Saturday’s game against No. 22 Iowa. The decision is not exactly a surprise as Ferguson has been doubtful in the run-up to the road game against the Hawkeyes.

Ferguson sustained an injury to his right shoulder in the first quarter of last Saturday’s last-second win over Nebraska, and has been unable to practice at all this week.

Ferguson’s 381 rushing yards, three rushing touchdowns and 5.4 yards per carry are all tops on the team. He’s added 12 receptions for 28 yards and another touchdown coming out of the backfield.

With Ferguson sidelined, the bulk of the running-game load is expected to shift to Ke’Shawn Vaughn. Through five games, Vaughn is second on the Illini with 325 yards and a pair of touchdowns.